WASHINGTON -- President Donald Trump pushed back Friday against reports he ordered White House lawyer Don McGahn to fire special counsel Robert Mueller last June.
"Fake news, folks. Fake news. Typical New York Times fake stories," Trump retorted dismissively when asked about it by reporters at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland.
The reports, first by the Times and then others, said Trump backed off on his attempt to fire the man who is investigating him, his election campaign's Russian contacts and his firings of FBI director James Comey and national security adviser Michael Flynn -- but only after lawyer McGahn refused to relay his directive to the Justice Department and threatened to quit if Trump pressed the issue.
In Washington, Mueller's team was still on the job Friday, investigating the president and his 2016 election campaign.
After the news came out Thursday night, Democratic Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia quickly accused Trump of crossing "a red line" lawmakers should meet forcibly to protect the Constitution. Warner is the ranking Democrat on the Senate intelligence committee. But Republicans were quick to dismiss the report, pointing out Mueller had not actually been fired.
Some legal experts noted presidents, like anyone else, can say things they don't mean when angry. At the same time, others saw the alleged Trump order as part of a pattern of obstruction Mueller could press, disrupting or even dooming Trump's presidency.
Jacob Frenkel, a defense lawyer and former prosecutor, said defense lawyers would argue the conversation with McGahn "was an expression of frustration and irritation, not an intended personnel action."
A statement alone, without follow-up action, can be subject to different explanations and allow for reasonable doubt as to the intent, he indicated.
"It may not be the conclusion that people want to reach, but sitting back and looking at it objectively, the fact that there was no firing means there was no obstruction," Frenkel said.
Andrew Leipold, a professor at the University of Illinois College of Law, concurred.
"People say all sorts of things that they're going to do, and then they calm down and they think better of it and they get talked out of it," he said. "Some of this may just be no more than the president -- as all presidents have done -- racing their engines about things."
This latest revelation isn't the only example of presidential actions some could see as an attempt to interfere with an investigation of Trump and his campaign. Another is the firing of Comey as FBI director last May. Mueller was appointed special counsel by Rod Rosenstein, the deputy attorney general, after Attorney General Jeff Sessions stepped aside because of his own close involvement with the Trump campaign.
"It is easy to see where this would be an element or component to consider as part of an obstruction mosaic," Frenkel said.
It could have no bearing on the investigation at all.
Or it could be part of an obstruction case against Trump or others.
But it raises a perennial constitutional question: Can the president be charged in criminal court? Some in the legal field say yes. More say no, the only recourse is impeachment by Congress.
Meanwhile, despite the sensational nature of the Times report, there is likely little Mueller doesn't already know about events in the White House. More than 20 White House employees have given interviews to the special counsel's investigation into possible obstruction and Trump campaign ties to Russians.
John Dowd, one of Trump's attorneys, said the White House, in what he called an "unprecedented" display of cooperation with Mueller's investigation, has turned over more than 20,000 pages of records. The president's 2016 campaign has turned over more than 1.4 million pages.
The number of voluntary interviews includes eight people from the White House counsel's office.
An additional 28 people affiliated with the Trump campaign have been interviewed by either the special counsel or congressional committees probing Russian election meddling. Dowd did not name the people nor provide a breakdown of how many were interviewed only by Mueller's team.
Trump's national approval numbers are low, but his conservative base has kept up its solid support through all the criticism he has come under in his first year as president. Why would this be any different?
In Congress, Democrats have been quick to exploit the report. Warner called Trump's actions "a gross abuse of power." However, Republicans noted the purported order came long ago and before Trump surrounded himself with new lawyers. Since then, his public demeanor toward Mueller has changed.
Nonetheless, Senate Republicans were worried last summer, and GOP Sens. Lindsey Graham and Thom Tillis introduced legislation to protect the special counsel. But it hasn't gone anywhere.
Trump has softened his public criticism of Mueller, White House officials say over and over he has nothing to hide, and his lawyers have signaled they are cooperating, too.
Tillis spokesman Daniel Keylin says since the legislation was introduced, "the chatter that the administration is considering removing special counsel Mueller has completely come to a halt."
Mueller's investigators hope to interview Trump soon.
This week, the president declared he was eager to do it -- and under oath.
"I'm looking forward to it, actually," Trump said when asked by reporters. As for timing, he said, "I guess they're talking about two or three weeks, but I'd love to do it."
His lawyers walked the comments back a bit. No interview has been agreed to, all sides agreed.
The story of Trump's alleged effort to sack Mueller added just one more question.
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